*Advanced*
Have you ever got those two confused? Now you can watch this video and understand a bit better the difference between them.
*Homework*
1. Make a sentence with each of those two words.
2. Challenge two friends by tagging their names in a comment.

Grammar Through Pictures...we’ve has such a great time with this! Scroll to the end for a better view of the task. I wish I could remember where the idea came from. The kids wrote the funniest paragraphs about the picture this week. Some were like news articles, but most were straight-up storytelling. Only one ended up with the baby hitting the ground (IRL, he didn’t, by the way. Mom’s amazing reflexes for the win!) We had such fun Googling the true story at the end and many students excitedly read their paragraphs out loud. 😍 #Read180#sixthgrade#elateacher#readingteacher#middleschool#readingintervention#iteachmiddleschool#Grammar#blendedlearning

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We’re often asked what our band name means and usually have to give it as an example in a sentence. I came across this headline today, and it displays a perfect example of how the current form (whither) is typically used. In this context, it’s meant to ask “what now?” or “what’s going to happen next?”, rather than indicating an actual direction.
Have any of you seen either whither or whitherward used in a sentence before? let us know! 😊📖#whitherwardontour#english#writing#grammar

0 0 1 hour ago

• We're = a combination between 'WE' and 'ARE'—indicating the action(s) of multiple people. • Were = a previous state of being; something no longer taking place or being done.

This one is for my fiction writers again. Don't keep on repeating what a character did a few sentences or paragraphs ago. If John slid off the bed and sat on the floor to ponder his reflection in the mirror in the first line of paragraph 1, your readers aren't likely to forget that 7 sentences later. So, don't introduce the next paragraph with "As John continued to ponder his mirror image having slid off the bed and sitting on the floor a few short moments before..." We remember. Cut!

6 1 1 hour ago

Fiction writers, take note! Referring to your character bios and sketches will help you keep them realistic and also consistent throughout the book. I've edited manuscripts where some characters turned into entirely different people by the end of the book-- NOT intentionally.